Rose Pink Knock Out® PP#15,070
Blooms begin in late spring and continue all summer!
First Knock Out® took the Rose world by storm, and now there's ultra-floriferous Pink Knock Out® to wow us all over again! Just as disease-resistant as its award-winning red cousin, Pink Knock Out® delights with an extra-long season of bloom!
These blooms are just 2 inches wide, but arise in such big clusters among the handsome blue-green foliage that you'll spot them from across the garden! They begin in spring and continue throughout summer and right into fall, persisting up till hard frost in my garden last season. They even self-clean! Now that's a landscape Rose -- colorful for three seasons and easy to care for in all four!
Like the original Knock Out®, this dark pink has superb resistance to Blackspot, Japanese Beetles, mildew, and many other common Rose scourges. It's even drought-tolerant, though of course it blooms best when given adequate water. You won't believe the difference that fresh, healthy foliage makes to your Rose display!
Another masterpiece from Canadian breeder William Radler, Pink Knock Out® is sure to be a runaway success. You just can't go wrong with this magnificent shrub Rose!
Pink Knock Out® reaches 3 1/2 feet tall and 4 feet wide. Space the plants about 3 feet apart for good coverage. Zones 4-9. Bareroot.
| Genus | Rosa |
| Variety | Pink Knock Out ® PP#15,070 |
| Bloom Season | Late Spring - Early Fall |
| Habit | Upright |
| Zone | 4 - 9 |
| Plant Height | 3 ft 6 in |
| Plant Width | 4 ft |
| Bloom Size | 2 in |
| Item Form | Bareroot |
Additional pruning tips for healthy, beautiful, productive roses:- Whether you’re deadheading, removing dead wood, or performing an annual pruning, make sure your cuts are no more than ¼ inch (5 mm) above a bud, and slope the cut away from the bud, to prevent water from collecting on it.
- Your cuts should always be clean, so keep your pruning shears sharp, and use pruning tools that are appropriately sized to whatever size stems you are cutting.
- To encourage an open-centered form, cut to an outward-facing bud. To encourage upright growth on roses with a spreading habit, prune a few of the stems to inward-facing buds.
- Prune any dieback to the healthy, white pith.
- Remove dead or diseased stems, as well as any that cross or are spindly.
- Your goal should be to have well-spaced stems that allow for a free flow of air.
- If pruning an established plant, remove any old wood that is flowering poorly, and use a saw to get rid of old stubs that are no longer producing new shoots.
- Other than climbing roses, you should prune newly planted roses hard, which encourages vigorous shoot production.
- When removing suckers, trace them back to the roots from which they are growing, and simply take them off.








